Published July 3 2008, 11:16 AM CDT
INDIANAPOLIS --
One of the fireworks bursting above the city
this year will contain a bit of cremated remains -- a fitting
tribute, organizers say, to the man who ran the annual event for 40
years.
Meredith Smith died in February at age 74. About a half-teaspoon of his ashes will be in a fireworks shell that will create a white burst in the sky for the finale of the show, set for Thursday night.
"I can't think of a better way," said family friend Kevin Moss.
He also will be memorialized through hundreds of T-shirts referring to the tribute as "the last shot."
Smith, a school maintenance worker, trained as pyrotechnician, or fireworks expert, after starting the neighborhood show, his widow Charlotte, said.
"He liked this sort of thing even though it wasn't his line of work," she said. She said her husband was interested in fireworks for as long as she could remember.
She said the shows started as a community service and the couple sometimes paid for them.
"Meredith felt like the people in this area didn't get the opportunities that other people got, and so he wanted to give them the opportunity," she said.
The release of the ashes shouldn't harm public health, said John Althardt of the Health and Hospital Corp. of Marion County.
"I think that whatever a family can do to remember their loved one ... is great," he said.
The fireworks will be shot over the White River.
"It makes a magnificent show," Charlotte Smith said. "People can see it all over."
According to Indiana law, cremated remains may be disposed of on the property of a consenting owner, uninhabited public land or in a waterway.
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Information from: The Indianapolis Star, http://www.indystar.com
Meredith Smith died in February at age 74. About a half-teaspoon of his ashes will be in a fireworks shell that will create a white burst in the sky for the finale of the show, set for Thursday night.
"I can't think of a better way," said family friend Kevin Moss.
He also will be memorialized through hundreds of T-shirts referring to the tribute as "the last shot."
Smith, a school maintenance worker, trained as pyrotechnician, or fireworks expert, after starting the neighborhood show, his widow Charlotte, said.
"He liked this sort of thing even though it wasn't his line of work," she said. She said her husband was interested in fireworks for as long as she could remember.
She said the shows started as a community service and the couple sometimes paid for them.
"Meredith felt like the people in this area didn't get the opportunities that other people got, and so he wanted to give them the opportunity," she said.
The release of the ashes shouldn't harm public health, said John Althardt of the Health and Hospital Corp. of Marion County.
"I think that whatever a family can do to remember their loved one ... is great," he said.
The fireworks will be shot over the White River.
"It makes a magnificent show," Charlotte Smith said. "People can see it all over."
According to Indiana law, cremated remains may be disposed of on the property of a consenting owner, uninhabited public land or in a waterway.
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Information from: The Indianapolis Star, http://www.indystar.com
